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THE 
EPIGRAPH 


ALBUM 





HOAAOLNS. 


Meet: 





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THE 


EPIGRAPH ALBUM 


ERWIN E. WOOD 


CHICAGO 
1890 


7 
LAST 


_ CopyriGuHT, 1890, 
By Erwin E. Woop. 


PANNE IGS 
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Holiday and Birthday Souvenir 


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MY OWN 
AND 


OTHER PROFESSIONS 


696128 





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CUCNeeA AOA HAHFO 








E who is too proud to 

stoop will miss the fra- 
grance of the flowers, the fla- 
vor of the vine-born berries 
and the delights of the cooling 
spring by the wayside. 


HE richest poetical na- 

tures may produce noth- 
ing, because of that very 
nature in them which dreams 
and only dreams, unable to 
creep along the dull level of 
exertion. 


-ENTIMENTALITY 

frequently causes us to 

wait and hope, when we should 
plan and act. 


VERY man needs a task- 

master; if not some one 
else, himself; if not himself, 
his necessities. 


HE successful ones in the 

battle of life are those 
who recover quickest from 
their fatigues, and press for- 
ward. 


EING a daisy does not 


save it from the sickle. 


HE blessing appreciated 
is the one which has been 
lost. 


F civilized men there are 
a few; of nations, none. 


FIND man most interesting 
when studied as an animal. 


AN is a creature feeding 

greedily on that which 

is freshest and sweetest in the 

greensward of life, the while 

trampling under his feet many 
a tender floweret. 


NYWAY, man is only an 
appetite; )and that ap- 
petite an insanity. 


T takes darkness to develop 
the demon in man. 


RESS is a civilizing stim- 

ulant which may be over- 

indulged in; but without dress 
man is a savage. 


ARK the difference be- 
tween intimacy and 
friendship. 


HE greatest possible dis- 

tance? It is that which  , 
lies between a good/ woman) Vitae 
anda bad woman. =~ 


MAN goes to the bad by 
degrees; a woman all at 
once. 


DUCATION is a bridg- 
ing of the way. 


HE most enduring earthly 

consolation is found in 
religion; the next in friend- 
ship, and close upon the latter 
—in scholarship. 








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ACTS are old; it is put- 
ting them to fresh uses 
that makes new eras. 


HE masses like to be led, 
and therefore choose 
leaders. 


ANY things seem odd 
to us because we are 
ignorant. 


E have to adapt our- 
selves to our adoptions. 


VERY luxu ae: adds / 
labor. os Atty 
(Sri ~ tase ha 144 LAY 


we frad rau 01k 


UCCESS is its own pun- 


ishment. 


HE worst thing about a 
bad thing is, that one 
bad thing leads to another. 





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i 


O show an intense love for 
any material object is to 
reveal a weakness. 


HE gardener may save 

even a weed, if but a 
trailing flower tenderly en- 
twines about it. 


FTER the tree has been 
felled we realize its grand 
proportions. 


see 
Cut down a bearing vine or 
fruited tree. 


e pains a humane heart to 


LEEPING is the over- 

lapping of our days, and 
should not be reckoned in 
their length. 


IFE begins and ends with 


leer Lip he Vie 


( 


Retr is the struggle of 


soul for speech. Wee afarke fbn Af 5, 


MONG songs I have 
many friends, both old 
and new. 


ILENCE is the back- 

ground of all symphonies, 
and a component element of 
all that is grand in nature or 
great in man. 


POEM is a spasm in 
literature. 


~~ ARICATURE | is the dis- 
tortion of a feature al- 
wie strongly pronounced. 


esWULPITS are the scales 
on which theologians are 


weighed. 


N plants let the moss be my 

emblem; it grows more 
beautiful under the snows of 
Winter—is at its best when 
the days are darkest. 





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